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Banks Fight to Kill Proposed Consumer Protection Agency
The Obama administration is asking Congress to create a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency to regulate consumer financial products ranging from credit cards to mortgages, and to simplify disclosure about them all.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, center, talks with Congressional Oversight Panel Chair Elizabeth Warren before the start of a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 10, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) Though virtually every cause of the nation's recent financial crisis was rooted in weak consumer protection, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is leading the fight against the proposed agency on grounds that it would make credit less available and more costly. The American Bankers Association, the Independent Community Bankers of America, and the Financial Services Roundtable also oppose the measure.
"We have no argument that regulation failed. Consumer protection is just one of the many areas where it fell down," said David Hirschmann, the president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Center for Capital Markets, which opposes the panel. "It just simply adds a new layer of regulation without fixing . . . our outdated, broken regulatory structure that was a contributing factor in our crisis."
The Chamber said it's spending about $2 million on ads, educational efforts and a grassroots campaign to kill the agency. It said that the grassroots effort has led to more than 23,000 letters sent to Congress to date.
The Center for Responsive Politics said that for the 2010 election cycle, commercial banks have donated almost $3.7 million to lawmakers — 54 percent of it to Republicans. Companies that provide credit have given about $1.4 million, 59 percent to Democrats. Mortgage bankers and brokers have given $581,423.
"Maybe instead of making government BIGGER, we should focus on making government BETTER," reads one Chamber ad.
The Chamber warns that the agency could morph into a monster regulator.
"If you look at this actual bill, the powers are so broad and so ill-defined that the scope of who is covered is incredible. They've managed to create a proposed new regulator for anyone who directly or indirectly provides credit to consumers," Hirschmann said. "If you allow people to give gift cards for your store . . . you've got a new regulator. It's amazingly broad in scope, scale and power."
The administration scoffs at those charges.
"Contrary to some advertisements you may have seen, we have no desire to interfere with Main Street retailers' ability to provide credit to their customers. That argument is to the financial regulation debate what the Death Panel argument is to the health insurance debate," Lawrence Summers, the chief economic adviser to President Barack Obama, said in a recent speech. "We have become convinced that it is essential that consumer financial regulation be carried on by an independent body whose mandate is uniquely and exclusively consumer and investor protection."
Until the current crisis, responsibility for these consumer protections fell to several separate regulators, who made consumer protection subservient to their core mission of regulating institutions for safety and soundness.
Predatory lending and no-documentation loans helped spawn the housing crisis. Weak oversight by federal regulators allowed mortgage bonds to be sold to investors as the safest of investments when they were far from it.
When economic times got tough last year, banks began padding their balance sheets by socking surprised consumers with new credit card fees that were hidden in contractual fine print.
"In practice, nobody really took it seriously. . . . I think clearly you have had a lot of abuses, and whatever was on the books wasn't being enforced," said Morris Goldstein, a former top official at the International Monetary Fund and a researcher for the Peterson Institute of International Economics. "I think it makes sense to try to wrap it together and give someone the responsibility to deal with the great bulk of it."
Opponents have suggested that the new agency could impede the way businesses operate, but that concern is rejected by Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard University law professor who's long championed creation of such a regulator. Separately, Warren leads a congressional panel that monitors the Treasury Department's bank bailout program.
"The CFPA will provide real oversight over financial institutions and create some basic safety standards. This will make it safer for your local butcher to take out a mortgage or a credit card, but the CFPA is not going to regulate the way he carries out his business," she told McClatchy, referring to a Chamber ad that suggests even local butcher shops would be regulated.
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., the chairman of the House of Representatives' Financial Services Committee, said Tuesday that he intends to exempt most non-financial businesses from oversight by the new agency. At a congressional hearing on Wednesday, the Chamber's Hirschmann said that while he appreciated Frank's modifications, the Chamber still opposes the bill.
Some leading Republicans are siding with the banks.
"Is the proper role of the government to limit consumer choice?" Alabama Rep. Spencer Bachus, the senior Republican on the Financial Services panel, asked Assistant Treasury Secretary Michel Barr during a hearing this month.
Barr, who as a former professor helped create the concept of a consumer financial protection agency, responded that by requiring clear and simple information for consumers, the agency would help them make better informed choices.
"It doesn't limit choice," Barr said.
Some Democrats, such as New York Rep. Nydia Velazquez, who heads the House committee on small business, are concerned about the bill's potentially broad sweep. In a statement to McClatchy, she warned that, "if these proposals are not crafted correctly, they could ensnare small businesses we don't think of as financial institutions. In addition, we need to consider how new regulations will impact small firms in the financial sector, like community banks and credit unions."
The proposed agency appears to have broad Democratic support in the House of Representatives. In the Senate, which has been slower to deal with financial regulation, support is harder to gauge.
Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., the chairman of the Banking Committee, has voiced support for the idea, but he's breaking with the administration and the House by proposing to consolidate half a dozen bank regulators into a single unified agency. A consumer protection agency could be folded into it, or it could be separate.
Advocacy groups say that the financial sector's opposition underscores the need to act.
"I don't see why people don't understand that this should be a measure of why to pass it," said Barbara Roper, the director of investor relations for the Consumer Federation of America. "If you assume, as I do, that they fear anything that threatens the way they do their business, their ability to profit through the abuse of their customers, then this (legislation) should be taken seriously."
In this environment, J.P. Morgan Chase and Bank of America announced this week that they'd modify their overdraft fee policies.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllThey have more regulations over the Banking Industry and Canada and it has not affected the ability to get credit to any great extent , barring those that simply should not be getting credit .
I would point out the rate of home ownership is higher in Canada then in the USA and the rate of household debt lower in Canada then the USA.
The banking system is also considered amongst the worlds strongest and did not require a massive taxpayer funded bailout.
The two jurisdictions that did the most to de-regulate and take away oversight were The United Kingdom and the USA and both those jurisidctions banking systems were hit the hardest.
>>Is the proper role of the government to limit consumer choice?" Alabama Rep. Spencer Bachus, the senior Republican on the Financial Services panel, asked Assistant Treasury Secretary Michel Barr during a hearing this month.
One would think a proper role of Government is to ensure the banking system remains sound and does not require 23 trillion in bailout money. Is it a proper role of Government to bail out the banking Industry?
Good points!
If Chase and BofA are offering to "modify" their overdraft fees, then they're running scared. This tells me we really need the consumer protection agency because once the heat's off, these predators will be back to skinning us alive.
Why is it that when these sociopaths promise to be good, Congress says "We trust you", and rolls over. Oh yeah, they come bearing gifts. Of course, that doesn't explain the Senate trusting Alito and Roberts who were blatantly contradicting their records in their testimony. But perhaps the corporations were so happy with the nominees the Senate just couldn't bear to disappoint them. If you look where corporate money is going, the big bucks are going to the Senate. It's a lot easier to logjam the democratic process when you don't have to buy off as many people.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
The uber-riche bullies have gotten over 23,000 letters written to Congress so far? Looks like it's time for us to flood Congress and the White House again with letters and phone calls. We really should be showing those banks what they can do without our money too, especially when they pay us only pennies on it while they're making billions.
Flooding the Congress and the White House with letters and phone calls for some consumer protection from the banksters is a total waste of your time and effort. Our Congress has decided that loan agreements are agreements between consenting adults and refuse to put any top limit on the interest the banksters may charge.
This is a question of democracy. Is your Representative voting in your interests? Or is he/she much more concerned with the generous 'donations' (BRIBES) they receive from their campaign financers? If your 'rep' votes against this effort to regulate the banking industry, and he/she voted for the bankster bailout, and the surge in Afghanistan, and has not signed on to HR 676, Medicare for all, Single Payer, that person is not represnting your interests. You must not vote for that person again. We need to replace the paid mercenaries of the wealthy with honest, ethical people who may be of any party or an independent. We are hurting ourselves by sending the same people back to Congress for decades because we are afraid if they don't win, they will be replaced by someone even worse. By continuing to vote for the lesser of two evils, thing just keep getting more evil. What else can you expect? We must take a stand and VOTE THE CORRUPT OUT OF CONGRESS!
Your for democracy but for us citizens to urge our reps to do what we want is a waste of time?
You are wasting your time.
Also to "vote somebody out" you need to vote somebody in that will win.
Got an Idea who that somebody is?
"We have no argument that regulation failed....It just simply adds a new layer of regulation without fixing . . . our outdated, broken regulatory structure that was a contributing factor in our crisis."
Maybe the "new layer of regulation" is intended by some to fix the broken regulatory structure and not add to it!
What else can we expect from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce?
It has been the biggest cheerleader of the so-called "free trade" agreements; the same free trade agreements that have destroyed America's manufacturing base in a race to seek out the cheapest labor market to benefit the bottom line for multi-national corporations.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has been sabotaging American workers for decades. "In 2004, the organization spent $53 Billion on lobbying; sent 3.7 million pieces of mail; placed 5.6 million phone calls and sent 30 million email messages on candidates behalf."
There was a contraption made in France designed to regulate the likes of these Banksters.
I think it started with a G...?
this may actually make me want to work for uncle sam.
very few things would make me as happy as beating the hell
out of the banks for 40 hrs a week!i would do this for
minimum wage. and work overtime for free. i'm an ex
banker and this WOULD be a labor of love!
elizabeth shipley
Why not join a federally insured credit union? I have used a credit union for over 35 years while living in various states and never had any trouble getting cash, making a deposit, etc.
I believe Sen. Durbin's state has a state mandated credit union that was set up in the 30's. Maybe we could all write congress suggesting that we have a national federal credit union.
""David Hirschmann, the president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Center for Capital Markets""... seems have other interests that over ride any thing to regulate runaway capitalism which there are not even enough private contractor prisons to hold those crooks.
bill black - who cleaned up the savings and loans scandal during the senile reagan's presidency says that goldman sachs are taking the bailout funds and are shorting the credit swap market of the own products
cancer is what they are
On this topic, i'd like to see what Ralph Nader and Dennis Kucinich have to say. Ralph Nader should be one of the very best analysts in the U.S. for this kind of topic, given his many decades of consumer protection activism and good government changes this lead to as a consequence of his work. And Dennis Kucinich is a good congressional rep. for the "little guy".
News media are not what I'd count on for good analysis on ... pretty much any topic. All I expect from them is news reporting and to stick by journalistic ethics, which very few do when it comes to critical issues in which a lot of corporate profit is at stake.
Those at the top level in the banking industry,like all greed oriented gangsters want to keep us the working people and the middle class in the slave system we now have. We must choose freedom for ourselves and socialism. It's that damn simple, and most especially for anyone having any damn ethics at all regardless of religion, whether theist or atheist. That goes double for anyone who really wants to walk the walk of the Judeo/Christian tradition which I've grown in that tradition understand that sex has not a damn thing to do with morality, I'm of that tradition and I won't force it on anyone else. All major religions have their strengths as do those atheist existentialists and humanists. As Moses said "Let my people go." Today we must say that to the defenders of this system which enslaves working and middle class people.
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Those at the top level in the banking industry like all greed oriented gangsters want to keep us the working people and the middle class in the slave system we now have. We must choose freedom for ourselves and socialism. It's that damn simple, and most especially for anyone having any damn ethics at all regardless of religion, whether theist or atheist. That goes double for anyone who really wants walk the walk of the Judeo/Christian tradition which I've grown in that tradition understand that sex has not a damn thing to do with morality, I've of that tradition and I won't force it on anyone else. All major religions have their strengths as do those atheist existentialists and humanists.
AD
I choose freedom but how do I choose Socialism.... if it is that damn simple, where do I choose it? In Cuba or Denmark?
A Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) is likely to be only as good as the President who appoints the head. I've heard the Fed wants to appoint the head of the agency which would be worse.
Based on the President's choice of Geitner and Bernanke, I am not having a good feeling about him appointing someone like Ralph Nader to head the CPA.
All the other federal agencies that Ralph helped create are suffering from a revolving door between the head regulators and industry leaders.
Obama the unregulated TARP bailout and has resisted opportunities to control foreclosures, bankruptcies and deceptive accounting practices by the banks, not to mention the CPA.
I've heard that pizza delivery guys got jobs as loan officers.
I think it would be better to demand high qualifications of loan officers. For example, certified public accountant, certified financial planner, actuary or a bachelors degree in math/statistics/accounting or finance with a 3.0 GPA.
These new loan officers would not get easily fooled by AAA rated sub-prime and ARM loans.
Loan officers should not be paid by the size and quantity of their transactions but instead should be on a fixed salary or based on the long term performance of their portfolio of loans.
Make your neighborhood loan officer your consumer protection agent!
Wow! - check out this video:
http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/1253903938.php